“Christmas is over.”

January 4, 2009

Will spoke aloud what we all were silently thinking to ourselves this morning after a dramatic collapse of the Christmas tree.img_0309 EllaRose was beneath, pulling on a favored ornament, when the un-watered, empty-based Old Blue found itself top-heavy and came crashing down.

There were minimal casualties.   I was sad about this one.img_0314 But, since I found all the pieces, I superglued it back together.

Ella Rose did not get crushed, thank God.  But, she did not escape unscathed.  Poor baby.img_0325

Although, really, she didn’t and doesn’t seem too bothered by it.  That’s our tough cookie.img_0317

And as today is the Feast of the Epiphany (Three Kings Day, the 12th Day of Christmas), Christmas really is over.  Hooray!  and Wah!  It’s always bittersweet to move on from the Holiday Hoopla, but move on we must.  Look out 2009!


The next best thing to Santa

January 2, 2009

img_0227My mom and dad (and youngest sister) came to visit this past week from Chicago(land).  What fun we had with Aunt Anna, Grandma and Papa!

In addition to the lap-time, book reading, giggling and snuggling, we took a trip to the James Island County Park’s Holiday Festival of Lights.   With over 600 light displays AND a choo choo train ride through the enchanted forest, it was a winner before we even got there.img_0235img_0247img_0248img_0245img_0254img_0257


What does that mean?

December 25, 2008

img_0099Ben’s language has been exploding lately. It’s not that his vocabulary is growing. He’s always had LOTS of *words*, it’s putting the words together to fully express his intent that has been a challenge for Ben. But not only that. Beyond requesting things, naming things and answering questions there has been a void in Ben’s typical conversation repetoire. It’s actually one of the long-term “wishes” I’ve had for Ben and RDI. I’ve longed for Ben to develop CURIOSITY.

I didn’t notice it at first, but as Will got older and his play matured, it was easier to see the deficit. Ben’s play lacked the investigative nature of exploration. He didn’t experiment, or try new ways of using a toy. His pretend play was very very simple and would stall out after declaring who he was pretending to be (“I’m Dadda”, “I’m the worker”.)

But now. Wow. It started with some non-fiction picture books we have. They’re filled with photos of animals and lots of sidebar information about them. Ben would pour over each page when looking at books by himself, and would request the books be read aloud to him every chance he got. “Under the Sea” was a favorite and he loved to comment not only that there was a scuba diver, but that the diver “uses a face mask and snorkel” and that “divers can take pictures with an underwater camera”.

But then. Oh, then. Ben has seen photos of Mark and I when we used to scuba dive. They come up fairly often on our ‘photo slide show’ screen saver. Comparisons between the diver in the book and the “Mama was a diver” photos started happening. Not such a big deal in our neuro-typical world, but Capital B-I-G in Ben’s.

From there he’s progressed to *asking questions* about things. At first, it was “what’s that?” or “what’s that called?” But often, the answer *wasn’t enough* for Ben. He’s figured out he can get MORE information by asking the right questions. So now he follows up his initial query with more questions, usually “what’s that mean?”, to *clarify*! And to make sure of his understanding, he’ll repeat what I’ve said and sometimes, not often, but sometimes, will PARAPHRASE the definition by relating his new experience to a past one! It’s really really incredible. I’m loving every minute, even when the questions get tricky and I defer to the husband. “hmm, that’s a good question for Daddy!”

Here’s a sampling of what Ben’s been wondering about this month:

“What’s coal?” then, “what’s carbon mean?” (one for Daddy!)
“What’s sleigh mean?”
“What’s ‘rejoice’ mean?”
“What’s needle and thread?”
“What’s this called?” (garland) “What’s that mean?”
“What’s that mean–celebrate?”
“What’s manger?”
“What’s shepherd mean?”
And on and on and on…

But that’s not all. There have been wonderful developments physically with Ben’s balance, coordination, and strength. The desire to relate and connect with others expands every day. And he’s reading. Not memorizing, Reading. I’ll save these milestones for another post, however. For now we’re celebrating ["celebrate means I dance and sing and have a party."] CURIOSITY!

Wishing you many Little Miracles!
Merry Christmas!

GigiMama


Muppet Monday (Thursday Installment): Muppet Family Christmas (Part 5 of 5)

December 25, 2008


Muppet Monday: Muppet Family Christmas (Part 4 of 5)

December 22, 2008


Muppet Monday (Wednesday Installment): Muppet Family Christmas (Part 2 of 5)

December 17, 2008


Muppet Monday: Muppet Family Christmas (Part 1 of 5)

December 15, 2008

Best Christmas Special EVER.  This is from 1987 with the Muppet Show, Sesame Street, and Fraggle Rock muppets all together.  You know, like a family.

Stay tuned for parts 2-5…